Archive for October 30, 2018

Politicizing the massacre of 11 Pittsburgh Jews must stop

October 30, 2018

Source: Politicizing the massacre of 11 Pittsburgh Jews must stop – Opinion – Jerusalem Post

( The MSM and the Dems have been truly sickening in this regard.  It makes one wonder if they have any standards or ethics whatsoever… – JW )

Famed economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman suggested that Trump was to blame, at least in part.

BY SHMULEY BOTEACH
 OCTOBER 29, 2018 21:19

Mourners visit a makeshift memorial outside the Tree of Life synagogue

This past Saturday, the Jewish day of rest, a middle-aged man burst into a baby-naming service at a Pittsburgh synagogue. What followed was the deadliest antisemitic attack in American history. Eleven men and women, who had come only to celebrate and to pray, were gunned down, their blood pooling around their scattered prayer books.

A heroic team of local police officers charged the shul under heavy fire. Though many sustained severe wounds, the massacre was finally brought to an end. The gunman was captured and should, in my opinion, face the death penalty.

In the days since the attack, President Donald Trump has unequivocally condemned the slaughter as an “antisemitic act of pure evil.” The president declared “the widespread persecution of Jews” to be “one of the ugliest and darkest features of human history,” and one that he vowed to fight. “It will take all of us working together to extract the poison of antisemitism from our world,” the president went on, asking Americans to “unite to conquer hate.”

The shooter, 46-year-old Robert Bowers, announced his arrival at the synagogue by screaming “all Jews must die.” He allegedly later told police officers that Jews were committing “genocide against his people.” Pretty ironic, that. A racist Jew-hater claiming the Jews are guilty of genocide just one week before the 80th anniversary of Kristallnacht.

On social media, Bowers had frequently attacked not only Jews but Trump for his closeness to Jews, to whom he referred in the most grotesque terms. “Trump is surrounded by k****,” the rancid killer lamented, “there is no #MAGA as long as there is a k*** infestation.”

DESPITE THESE facts, however, many people have come close to blaming Trump for the shooting.

Joe Biden, widely expected to run for the presidency in 2020, seemed to do so when he tweeted, apparently to the president, that “words matter” and “silence is complicity.”

Famed economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman suggested that Trump was to blame, at least in part. Speaking sarcastically, Krugman tweeted a link to the story with the caption, “but none of the white supremacist terrorism has anything to do with Trump, oh no.”

The Washington Post,
 also, featured an op-ed on its home page titled “How Culpable is Trump for the Shooting.” The author of that piece, GQ’s Julia Ioffe, tweeted “a word to [her] fellow American Jews: This president makes this possible. Here. Where you live. I hope the embassy move over there, where you don’t live was worth it.”

To politicize the murder of 11 Jews – let alone the worst antisemitic attack on American soil in our nation’s history – is lamentable.

Antisemitism and its tragic incarnation in this devastating attack are caused by those who actually hate Jews and call for violence against them. Sadly, there has never been a monopoly on antisemitism. It stems from both the extreme Left and the extreme Right.
It was the hard Left that first accused the Jewish state of genocide and the IDF of being the Gestapo, and it has for years depicted Israel and the Jews within it as oppressors and murderers who deserve the waves of terrorism that they are repeatedly forced to endure. Witness Jew-haters like Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, who just last week employed the worst Nazi verbiage by calling Jews “termites,” directly implying the need for their extermination.

We dare not forget Students for Justice in Palestine, which holds tributes for terrorist “martyrs,” such as Dalal Mughrabi, who carried out the greatest antisemitic attack in Israel’s history, murdering 38 Israelis, seven of whom were under the age of six.

Then we could point to the extreme Right and the growing number of neo-Nazi filth who march in Charlottesville to the chant of “Jews will not replace us.” We could certainly blame the festering scourge of white-supremacist scum, who have increasingly turned to violence to express their hate-riddled minds.

Both extreme Left and extreme Right have shown horrible strains of antisemitism.

We must also blame nations like Iran that openly call for and fund violence against Jews across the world. We must also point to those who’ve offered them support.

I will not politicize the murder of 11 Jews, so I will not point fingers or name parties. But dare not forget that the Iran nuclear agreement was negotiated by the United States, all while the mullahs threatened Israel with complete annihilation.

Will those who negotiated it expect us to overlook their agreement with Iran, despite the nation’s funding and execution of arguably the deadliest antisemitic attack in modern history at the AMIA Jewish Community Center in Buenos Aires, which left 85 dead and hundreds more wounded?

Do the parties that were in power then assume we will forget that they insisted on forking over billions of dollars in cash to this international standard-bearer of antisemitism, while never once condemning those mullahs for their unspeakable sins in both word and action?

AS A Jew I am extremely grateful to President Trump for the unparalleled support he has shown Israel in the Oval Office. But that did not stop me from publicly and strongly criticizing the president for his failure to sufficiently condemn the white supremacists in Charlottesville. There was nothing but evil on the neo-Nazi side.

But if we are to criticize serious failure, as we must, then we must similarly laud significant success.

In defending Israel, Trump has exceeded our expectations.

He and his soon-departing Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley brought the fight for Israel at the UN to the highest bar yet. He moved the American Embassy to the Jewish people’s eternal capital in Jerusalem, which neither George W. Bush nor Barack Obama did, despite the latter’s promises to do so in 2008.

Trump has already made the decision to remove our nation from the disastrous nuclear agreement signed with Iran, which he called out as a “rogue state.” As we speak, his administration continues its work to reenact sanctions and clear a way out of the Iran deal, not only for our own nation but for our allies in Europe and across the world.

Trump also signed into law the Taylor Force Act, which sought to put an end to the Palestinian Authority’s sadistic practice of handing out actual monetary rewards to those who’ve killed Jews. Believe it or not, throughout the Obama administration, the PA was giving out enormous sums to those serving prison sentences for murdering or attempting to murder Jews in Israel. In the last year, the PA distributed over $315 million – or 8% of its entire overall budget – through its outrageous system of terrorist-welfare. All this, from the hundreds of millions of dollars the PA receives annually from the United States in foreign aid – or received, considering Trump has finally begun to cut it.

In fact, if Bowers had been a Palestinian and his 11 victims Jews living in Israel, he and his family would have been collecting from their terrorism pension for the rest of their lives. And, until the passing of the Taylor Force Act, he would have thanked us for the cash.
Ultimately, though, what makes the accusations of antisemitism against Trump especially unfair is the fact that beyond just having Jewish friends and associates, he is the first president of the United States to have Jewish children and grandchildren.

Even Trump’s worst enemies would admit that he loves and deeply cherishes his daughter Ivanka, who is herself an Orthodox Jew. He supported her decision to join the Jewish people through the strictest processes of conversion, before throwing her a kosher wedding. Through his daughter, Trump now has three Jewish grandchildren who attend Jewish schools. His son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and Ivanka regularly attend synagogue themselves.

For Trump, the looming threats facing Jewish community centers have become, if anything, entirely personal.

As yet more Jewish blood is absorbed into the earth, we cannot allow these events to be sharpened into political spears to be hurled against political opponents. That would only deepen the divides within a nation that direly needs to heal. We must instead take a moment to reflect upon who are the ones truly spreading hateful gospels against the Jewish people, and do everything in our power to ensure that they are weakened, silenced and eventually brought down.

The writer, “America’s Rabbis,” whom The Washington Post called “the most famous rabbi in America,” is founder of The World Values Network, a leading organization defending Israel and the Jewish people in global media. His most recent book is The Israel Warrior. Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.

 

Pittsburgh shooting a symptom of mounting anti-Semitism 

October 30, 2018

Source: Pittsburgh shooting a symptom of mounting anti-Semitism – Israel Hayom

 

Israel is not looking to topple Hamas in Gaza, official admits 

October 30, 2018

Source: Israel is not looking to topple Hamas in Gaza, official admits – Israel Hayom

 

In dramatic move, PLO pulls out of all agreements ‎with Israel ‎ 

October 30, 2018

Source: In dramatic move, PLO pulls out of all agreements ‎with Israel ‎ – Israel Hayom

 

Report: Israel sold $250m. of sophisticated spy systems to Saudi Arabia 

October 30, 2018

Source: Report: Israel sold $250m. of sophisticated spy systems to Saudi Arabia – Middle East – Jerusalem Post

These are the most sophisticated systems Israel has ever sold to any Arab country.

BY JULIANE HELMHOLD
 OCTOBER 28, 2018 18:46
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman

Saudi Arabia and Israel held secret meetings which led to an estimated $250-million deal, including the transfer of Israeli espionage technologies to the kingdom, Israeli media reported on Sunday, citing an exclusive report by the United Arab Emirate news website Al-Khaleej.
Some of the spy systems, which are the most sophisticated systems Israel has ever sold to any Arab country, have already been transferred to Saudi Arabia and put into use after a Saudi technical team received training in operating them, the report added.
The exclusive report also revealed that the two countries exchanged strategic military information in the meetings, which were conducted in Washington and London through a European mediator.
Such cooperation would not be the first of its kind between Israel and Saudi Arabia.
In September, Al-Khaleej reported that Saudi Arabia had purchased Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system to defend itself from Houthi missile attacks.
The deal, which was reportedly mediated by the United States included further plans to reach an agreement on broad military cooperation between the two countries.
While Israel has no official ties with Saudi Arabia, the relationship with the Sunni kingdom and other Gulf states has grown stronger in recent years, due in large part to the shared threat of Iran’s expansion across the region.
IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Gadi Eisenkot met with his counterparts from several Arab countries, including Saudi Arabia’s Chief of Staff Gen. Fayyad bin Hamed Al-Ruwaili, in mid-October while in Washington for the Countering Violent Extremist Organizations Conference for military commanders.
While this seemed to be the first publicized meeting between Eisenkot and Al-Ruwaili, it was the second consecutive year the two attended the military commanders’ conference.
Last November, following Eisenkot’s first participation in the conference, he offered to share Israeli intelligence about Iran with Riyadh, telling the Saudi newspaper Elaph in an unprecedented interview that what he heard from the Saudis about Iranian expansion was “identical” to Israeli concerns.
Anna Ahronheim contributed to this report.

 

Senior official: Israel has attacked Syria since Russian spy plane downed 

October 30, 2018

Source: Senior official: Israel has attacked Syria since Russian spy plane downed – Arab-Israeli Conflict – Jerusalem Post

Syria downed the Russian plane after an Israeli attack on an Iranian target.

BY HERB KEINON
 OCTOBER 29, 2018 17:58
An Israeli air force F15 fighter jet.

The official said that the military coordination with Moscow is continuing as it did before the downing of the plane, in which 15 Russian airmen were killed.

That incident, where Syria downed the Russian plane after an Israeli attack on an Iranian target, triggered a mini-crisis in ties between Jerusalem and Moscow, and led Moscow to transfer S-300 anti-aircraft missile batteries to Syria.

Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman alluded to continued Israeli attacks in Syria during a KAN Bet radio interview earlier this month, saying that just because you don’t hear something, doesn’t meant nothing is happening.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said three weeks ago that he would be meeting “shortly” with Russian President Vladimir Putin to discuss the situation in Syria following the downing of the plane, may meet with the Russian leader in Paris at the end of next week.

Netanyahu is scheduled to fly to Paris on November 10 for two days to take part in events marking the 100th anniversary of the armistice ending World War I. French President Emmanuel Macron has invited some 80 world leaders to attend, including Putin, Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump.

Soon after Russia became actively engaged in the Syrian civil war in September 2014, Netanyahu flew to Moscow to set up a deconfliction mechanism between Israel and Russia to prevent accidental confrontation between the two countries in Syrian skies. That mechanism worked well until the incident last month. Russia accused Israel of using their intelligence plane as cover in carrying out an attack near Latakia, something which Israel has flatly denied, saying it was a lack of professionalism that led the Syrians to accidentally shoot down the Russian aircraft.

 

Netanyahu’s Gaza policy: De-escalation without war – DEBKAfile

October 30, 2018

Source: Netanyahu’s Gaza policy: De-escalation without war – DEBKAfile

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu chose to elaborate on his security policy in the face of the Gaza Strip conflict for the first time on the day before Israel’s municipal elections on Oct, 30.

Israel’s military restraint in the face of escalating Palestinian terrorist provocations from the Gaza Strip over the past seven months has drawn criticism and general perplexity about the Netanyahu government’s and IDF policy. On Monday, Oct. 29, a “senior official” called reporters to hear a detailed elucidation of the prime minister’s policy for first time.

Netanyahu found this step necessary – not only to sway the local elections, but because recent events have raised questions about his handling of the soaring violence from the Gaza Strip – which peaked with heavy missile fire against two Israeli cities last Wednesday, and the standstill of Israeli operations against Iran in Syria. Confidence in his reputation as “Mr Security” who can be relied on to navigate Israel on a safe course with a steady hand has begun to falter.

Netanyahu’s trip to Oman last Friday, Oct. 26, and talks with Sultan Qaboos bin Said were intended to impress the people with his wide range of strategic contacts in the Arab world and re-burnish his image. But by bad luck, its impact was drowned out by the massive rocket barrage from the Gaza Strip that same Friday and the tragic Pittsburgh synagogue massacre of 11 Jewish worshipers the next day. Some critics faulted him for not getting on a plane and flying there at once, to demonstrate the highest level of Israeli solidarity with the American Jewish community, instead of sending Education Minister Naftali Bennett. But fatigue clearly won out,

The prime minister had carefully timed his Oman trip to demonstrate that his good connections in the Gulf region were solid – even after the cloud cast by the Khashoggi murder over the Saudi kingdom and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, with whom he has close relations.

Before laying out the rationale behind his current security doctrine, Netanyahu would certainly have canvassed its popular reception by a privately-commissioned opinion poll,  to find out if he could expect the elections results in Tuesday’s municipal poll to be a vote of confidence. The ideas laid out by the “senior official” (Netanyahu himself) can be summed up as follows:

  • A resolution of the Gaza conflict should be sought through a negotiated truce arrangement rather than a major war which should be avoided.
  • Providing normal lives for the half million Israelis living within range of Gaza rockets is not sufficient justification for a full-scale war.
  • While the IDF is capable of capturing the Gaza Strip, no other parties are willing to take it off Israel’s hands.
  • Indirect negotiations with Hamas through the UN, Qatar and Egypt are the preferred course, while improving the lives of the Gaza population by supplying their essential needs.
  • Netanyahu is fully aware of the criticism he faces for this approach, but believes it has solid popular support.
  • The orders for the latest round of missile volleys came from Iran’s Al Qods Brigades in Syria and their commander Gen. Qassem Soleimani. Since no agreements are possible with a government dedicated to Israel’s destruction , a diplomatic solution is ruled out. All that remains therefore is deterrence and humanitarian aid as the means for preventing the Gaza crisis blowing up in all our faces.
  • Although there are no reports of Israeli operations in Syria, they are nonetheless continuing.

There is no gainsaying the large holes in the prime minister’s propositions and the strategy he has laid out, which hinges essentially on waiting patiently for Egypt, Qatar and the UN to sort out Israel’s security problems. Their efforts in recent months have not produced calm, but the reverse, a greater Palestinian appetite for violence while mocking Israeli deterrence.

But lurking in the background of the prime minister’s thinking is a possible snap election in the early months of 2019, ahead of the scheduled November date. The strategy he laid out may well represent the outline of a campaign platform which he believes will draw the popular vote.  Meanwhile, he hopes to influence the municipal poll of Oct. 30 in favor of the candidates of his Likud party.

 

Why We Cling To The Tree Of Life | Daily Wire

October 30, 2018

Source: Why We Cling To The Tree Of Life | Daily Wire

Jeff Swensen/Getty Images

On Saturday, in a constantly-repeating story as old as the Jewish people, a Jew-hating murderer decided to slaughter as many Jews as possible. This murderer shouted the slogan of Jew-haters throughout time: “All Jews must die.”

That slogan has served to justify slaughter in the name of nationalism, in the name of communism, in the name of Christianity, in the name of Islam. Indeed, Jew-hatred is unique because Jew-hatred is infinitely chameleonic.

The Jews, however, are not.

Traditional Jewish thought suggests that every Jewish soul was present at the foot of Mount Sinai when God spoke to the nation of Israel, born and unborn. The Jews were bound in an inextricable covenant; we all consented, and we all became part of that covenant.

While the history of the Jewish people is filled with fractious division, the evidence suggests that this basic principle was fundamentally true – and history has treated the Jews as a closely-bound unit. Jewish identity wasn’t a choice. It was a reality.

Modernity has obscured this basic truth for many Jews. The enlightenment allowed Jews to believe they could exit the Jewish lineage, to abandon the faith of their fathers; freedom of choice came with freedom to exit. But the world is not that malleable. Jews, for better or worse, remain Jews.

Every Jew knows this in his or her marrow. When we meet another Jew, the first thing we do is play Jewish geography: who knows whom, who is related to whom. That’s the rich side of being part of a global tribe – everyone is one degree removed from everyone else.

We’re reminded of that in joy, and we’re reminded of that in horror.

America is the most tolerant and accepting and loving country the Jews have experienced, outside of Israel, in the long span of recorded time – but the curse of anti-Semitism never leaves the Jews. I grew up and live in Los Angeles, the second-largest Jewish community in the United States; I wear my yarmulke publicly. I have never felt unsafe. Still, nearly every Jew is one degree removed from tragedy. In 1991, a synagogue in my community was firebombed. In 1999, a white supremacist shot up a local Jewish Community Center. In 2002, a radical Muslim terrorist shot up the El-Al counter at the Los Angeles International Airport, killing a member of my local community. When I attended the Yeshiva University High School of Los Angeles, our school was evacuated multiple times per year thanks to bomb threats; we were located next to the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles, which was similarly evacuated routinely.

So why don’t Jews treat anti-Semitism in the United States as a crisis? Because Jews live with a certain background knowledge: we know how bad things can get, and therefore how good we have it. The Holocaust still exists in living memory; the genocidal screams of tyrants still resonate throughout the Middle East; Jews in Europe are still fleeing the shocking escalation of anti-Jewish hatred in countries from Sweden to France.

But even in the United States, hatred of the Jews is on the rise. That rise is indicative of a deeper problem of the Western soul. As Western civilization tears itself apart, anti-Semitism comes bursting through the seams.

That anti-Semitism can be fought. It can only be fought by choosing life.

In that Pittsburgh synagogue on Saturday morning, the Jew-hating murderer rushed into a room in which a brit milah was taking place: a circumcision ceremony, a ceremony as old as the Jewish people, a ceremony welcoming an eight-day-old child into the community of the Jews. In other parts of the synagogue, different minyanimwere reading the story of Abraham’s near-sacrifice of Isaac on a mountain.

Why would Jews continue to inaugurate children into the most targeted community in human history? Jewish destiny may be inescapable, but why embrace that destiny? The members of the Tree of Life Synagogue were shot to death in a synagogue. So why continue to cluster in synagogues, fulfilling age-old commandments, the elderly passing down their traditions to infants?

Because, as the Tree of Life Synagogue’s name attests, the Torah – the Jewish destiny – is a “tree of life for all those who cling to it.” (Proverbs 3:18) And we are enjoined to choose life. That, after all, is the story of Abraham and Isaac: a story not of God asking Abraham to kill his son, but a story of God asking if Abraham is willing to place his son in mortal danger in service to God – and God’s grace in saving Isaac thanks to Abraham’s commitment. That is the story of the Jewish people. That is the story members of the Tree of Life Synagogue were reading as they died al kiddush Hashem, in the sanctification of God’s name.

And that is the story of our civilization. An attack on the Tree of Life is an attack on all of us – those of us who wish to imbue our own children with a sense of Godliness in a dark world, a sense of eternal value in a society eating away at itself. Inside the sanctuary, all was peaceful on the Sabbath — until the gunshots rang out.

The only proper response is the same response Jews have given throughout time: to fight back. To stubbornly cling to that which stamps us with the image of God. To fight darkness with light, untruth with truth, and death with life.